I have to reiterate my comment from '05 - this is probably my favorite film of all time. It's definitely not the "best film of all time", I wouldn't make a claim like that. But it presses all the right buttons for me. The supporting cast is outright stunning, with Phillip Seymour Hoffman, Barry Pepper, Rosario Dawson, Brian Cox, Anna Paquin - all complete gold, all of them nail their parts perfectly. You become very sympathetic to Ed Norton's plight in this film. I often was easily able to place myself in his position, which was both scary and captivating. The soundtrack is perfect - a very haunting score by Terence Blanchard with an instantly recognizable recurring musical theme (I really need to pick up that score on CD). In total, it's just a powerful, moving cinematic experience that conveys a lot of different emotions and ideas about what it means to be a human being. And everyone in this movie is a human being - everyone is humanized, with similar issues and faults to deal with, to the extent where you can pick any given character and go "I know someone just like that." Spike Lee is a cinematic poet - his films are like poetry, in the tradition of Shakespeare but modernized, hip, and relevant to our current society, and this film is no exception. It just hit me the right way. I honestly can't say that I like any one movie better than this one.